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NewJeans' Danielle attends Omega event in Japan with Ador staff
NewJeans' Danielle attends Omega event in Japan with Ador staff

Straits Times

time15 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Straits Times

NewJeans' Danielle attends Omega event in Japan with Ador staff

SEOUL – K-pop girl group NewJeans' Danielle was spotted at an event in Japan accompanied by staff from her agency Ador, a first since the girl group took legal action against the company. The 20-year-old Korean-Australian singer was in Kyoto, Japan, on June 18 to attend Swiss luxury watchmaker Omega's product launch for its new Aqua Terra 30mm collection. Also at the event were celebrities such as American model Ashley Graham, Nigerian singer Tems, American singer-actress Ariana DeBose and British actress Marisa Abela. Danielle, whose full name is Danielle Marsh, appeared at the event as a global ambassador of the brand, which she has endorsed since 2024. According to officials quoted by South Korean news outlet Sports Chosun, the event was part of Danielle's endorsement commitments, which had been planned way in advance by Ador. NewJeans also comprise Minji, 21; Hanni, 20; Haerin, 19; and Hyein, 17. The girl group have been in conflict with Ador since November 2024, when the members unilaterally declared they had terminated their contracts with the agency, citing a breach of trust. Since then, the group have attempted to operate independently under the name NJZ. The Seoul High Court on June 17 rejected an appeal filed by NewJeans , which challenged an injunction that barred them from independently signing advertising contracts or pursuing entertainment work without Ador's prior approval. The court's decision upheld a previous ruling in favour of Ador, a label under K-pop conglomerate Hybe, reinforcing its claim that the girl group's exclusive contracts remain valid. July marks three years since NewJeans' debut. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Write what you know: Play School presenter mines real-life family drama
Write what you know: Play School presenter mines real-life family drama

Sydney Morning Herald

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Write what you know: Play School presenter mines real-life family drama

Despite being a Korean-Australian adoptee herself, actor and now freshly minted playwright Michelle Lim Davidson had not been planning to explore the topic in her debut play. In 2023, she was part of the Griffin Studio program, a creative lab for early career playwrights, and was planning a piece about K-pop, but after a post-pandemic trip to South Korea, the work's direction shifted. 'I was going back to see my Korean family. It was my second trip back after meeting them,' says Lim Davidson. 'I thought maybe as a playwright I should attempt to write what I know. So I came back and said, okay, the K-pop is still strangely relevant, but I am going to write about what happens after the [adoption reunion] Hollywood moment. 'After the hugging and the crying, how do you establish a relationship with somebody that you barely know? How do you bridge that emotional, cultural and physical distance? I felt it's not an experience people have had much insight into, and that's why I thought, well, I'll give it a go.' The resulting play is Koreaboo. The two-hander stars Lim Davidson as Korean-Australian adoptee Hannah, who is visiting her birth mother in Seoul hoping to spend the summer connecting, but the reality doesn't live up to her initial expectations. Lim Davidson drew inspiration for the work from her own life as an adoptee from South Korea. She grew up in Newcastle having come to Australia at four-and-a-half months old. 'I was the only Asian person at my school until year four, so you grow up not seeing anyone who looks like you and disconnected from your culture,' says Lim Davidson. 'So much of the play is about a Korean adoptee trying to go back and understand Korean culture, like experimenting through K-pop, but the characters discover that identity can't be manufactured. 'Anyone who's come from being born in a different country or had ancestral roots somewhere else, it's like you're constantly in that in-between world. It's been amazing to write my own role, that I fit into, with the messiness and rawness of it all.' Lim Davidson started searching for her biological family in her late 20s, eventually finding them after a tough years-long bureaucratic process, filled with setbacks. 'I was able to reunite with my family in Korea, which is an immense, special thing in my life. I have their support and my family's support here in Australia, too, to write and share some of my experience,' says Lim Davidson. '[ Koreaboo ] is not a documentary on my life, but it has been imagined from reality.'

Write what you know: Play School presenter mines real-life family drama
Write what you know: Play School presenter mines real-life family drama

The Age

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

Write what you know: Play School presenter mines real-life family drama

Despite being a Korean-Australian adoptee herself, actor and now freshly minted playwright Michelle Lim Davidson had not been planning to explore the topic in her debut play. In 2023, she was part of the Griffin Studio program, a creative lab for early career playwrights, and was planning a piece about K-pop, but after a post-pandemic trip to South Korea, the work's direction shifted. 'I was going back to see my Korean family. It was my second trip back after meeting them,' says Lim Davidson. 'I thought maybe as a playwright I should attempt to write what I know. So I came back and said, okay, the K-pop is still strangely relevant, but I am going to write about what happens after the [adoption reunion] Hollywood moment. 'After the hugging and the crying, how do you establish a relationship with somebody that you barely know? How do you bridge that emotional, cultural and physical distance? I felt it's not an experience people have had much insight into, and that's why I thought, well, I'll give it a go.' The resulting play is Koreaboo. The two-hander stars Lim Davidson as Korean-Australian adoptee Hannah, who is visiting her birth mother in Seoul hoping to spend the summer connecting, but the reality doesn't live up to her initial expectations. Lim Davidson drew inspiration for the work from her own life as an adoptee from South Korea. She grew up in Newcastle having come to Australia at four-and-a-half months old. 'I was the only Asian person at my school until year four, so you grow up not seeing anyone who looks like you and disconnected from your culture,' says Lim Davidson. 'So much of the play is about a Korean adoptee trying to go back and understand Korean culture, like experimenting through K-pop, but the characters discover that identity can't be manufactured. 'Anyone who's come from being born in a different country or had ancestral roots somewhere else, it's like you're constantly in that in-between world. It's been amazing to write my own role, that I fit into, with the messiness and rawness of it all.' Lim Davidson started searching for her biological family in her late 20s, eventually finding them after a tough years-long bureaucratic process, filled with setbacks. 'I was able to reunite with my family in Korea, which is an immense, special thing in my life. I have their support and my family's support here in Australia, too, to write and share some of my experience,' says Lim Davidson. '[ Koreaboo ] is not a documentary on my life, but it has been imagined from reality.'

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